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UK Covid death toll - Printable Version +- WBAUnofficial (https://wbaunofficial.org.uk) +-- Forum: WBAUnofficial (https://wbaunofficial.org.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=3) +--- Forum: Politics (https://wbaunofficial.org.uk/forumdisplay.php?fid=5) +--- Thread: UK Covid death toll (/showthread.php?tid=10162) Pages:
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RE: UK Covid death toll - baggy1 - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 12:45 PM)billybassett Wrote: I know many friends and family under 60 who are working to keep food on their table and their houses over their heads - No issue with that I've answered in bold - it doesn't help your argument when you keep posting manipulated graphs and skewed data and ignore cold hard facts (no matter how much you play them down). We do have a much higher number of deaths this year than normal, and that number of excess deaths has started to increase again over the last 4 weeks measured. The problem as I see it is that people are now arguing for the sake of arguing - we have a vaccine on the very near horizon and we only need to carry on like this for a few more weeks. RE: UK Covid death toll - Protheroe - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 02:18 PM)billybassett Wrote: I would say that the vast majority of the population is abiding by the rules that this bored is a reasonable representation. God help us if this bored is a reasonable representation of anything. RE: UK Covid death toll - baggy1 - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 01:09 PM)JOK Wrote:(11-20-2020, 12:06 PM)baggy1 Wrote: The Christmas break makes no sense at all, it's purely PR to get a headline 'Boris saves Christmas'. The decisions made by the government throughout this have been haphazard at best. If they had an approach that was consistent and joined up then I could understand it even if I didn't agree with it. An example is Nightingales - built brilliantly but there were no staff to work in them which must have been known, and then when there was an option there they could have separated out nightingales purely for Covid patients allowing other hospitals to run normal services. Schools, Testing, timing of lockdowns, level of support to business - all been haphazard and reactive throughout, which doesn't fill me with confidence about a vaccine rollout but who knows. They've been shocking throughout, not because of too many conflicting information but because they changed at each point of that information arising. (11-20-2020, 02:20 PM)Protheroe Wrote:(11-20-2020, 02:18 PM)billybassett Wrote: I would say that the vast majority of the population is abiding by the rules that this bored is a reasonable representation. I did think that before I typed
RE: UK Covid death toll - backsidebaggie - 11-20-2020 I don't think the vast majority of the population are complying, got to admit. In the cross section of family/friends/workmates I know, at least 80% are breaking the rules to varying degrees (although probably still socialising less than prior to lockdown). I'm finding a lot of people are sticking to them, say 5 or 6 days a week, but deciding to break them slightly with a small group once or twice a week (and not admitting it to many people! lol) Compare this to the first lockdown, when 90% of the same bunch of people were sticking to the rules completely. I've also been out on the road a couple of times a week on an evening, and its quite busy, even at 10-11pm. That's only my experience, and may not be a cross-section of society. RE: UK Covid death toll - baggy1 - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 02:35 PM)backsidebaggie Wrote: I don't think the vast majority of the population are complying, got to admit. In the cross section of family/friends/workmates I know, at least 80% are breaking the rules to varying degrees (although probably still socialising less than prior to lockdown). I'd agree with those observations bb with the big difference this time being schools therefore many people running kids around, from what I've heard though the urban areas are worse than the rural areas. Certainly round the midlands it doesn't feel like a lockdown, roads are as busy - the only missing parts are shops and pubs. RE: UK Covid death toll - billybassett - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 02:18 PM)baggy1 Wrote:(11-20-2020, 12:45 PM)billybassett Wrote: I know many friends and family under 60 who are working to keep food on their table and their houses over their heads - No issue with that I'm not arguing or misrepresenting. Guarantee there will be another lockdown in Jan/Feb. Covid doesn't get managed by lockdowns, masks and PCR mass testing. RE: UK Covid death toll - baggy1 - 11-20-2020 I've shown where you have misrepresented many times - graphs not showing up to date data ignoring recent upturns; graphs including random numbers for population growth that don't make sense but do downplay the excess deaths. What is the way to manage covid then? And just so as I understand - does this concern you? RE: UK Covid death toll - backsidebaggie - 11-20-2020 (11-17-2020, 08:34 PM)baggy1 Wrote: Vaccinate the older generation and the vulnerable and, if it’s effective, then that solves the vast majority of this problem. The rest of us can either vaccinate or get immunity if we are healthy enough. Jumping back a few days to this baggy1. Do you think this is how it will go? My gut feeling is that it won't be effective enough and the mandatory vaccination for everyone/every adult will come about. Then there'll be some carnage! What do you think? RE: UK Covid death toll - baggy1 - 11-20-2020 I think that in theory it should make things better, however seeing the way that everything else has been handled in this situation doesn't give me much confidence. There has to be identification of the people in each group, then there will be those that don't want to take it, followed by the distribution of the correct amount of vaccines to the right areas, then the resources to administer it (twice at a gap of 3 months each time). There are a lot of logistics involved and they need to deliver it properly, not promise 'x squillion people will be vaccinated by midnight tonight' soundbites. Hopefully it will work, I wouldn't make it mandatory but I personally will have it when it gets to my turn. RE: UK Covid death toll - backsidebaggie - 11-20-2020 (11-20-2020, 04:21 PM)baggy1 Wrote: I think that in theory it should make things better, however seeing the way that everything else has been handled in this situation doesn't give me much confidence. There has to be identification of the people in each group, then there will be those that don't want to take it, followed by the distribution of the correct amount of vaccines to the right areas, then the resources to administer it (twice at a gap of 3 months each time). There are a lot of logistics involved and they need to deliver it properly, not promise 'x squillion people will be vaccinated by midnight tonight' soundbites. I wouldn't make it mandatory either. I think we're already seeing the problem of people being labelled "idiot anti vaxers" when many just have legitimate concerns about a vaccine for something that (in their age group) has a tiny chance of killing them. Many of these people have had many vaccinations in the past but just aren't keen to have this one. As usual, the narrative of "idiot anti vaxer" will send people the other way and they'll dig their heels in even more. I firmly believe those who oppose having the vaccine should be given the chance to debate it against those who are pro vaccine, on tv etc, so everyone can make their own mind up. I'm dubious about the current idea of "censoring anti vaxers" on social media, as its not an "all or nothing" thing. Many pro vaccine people, who have had many vaccines over the years, simply don't want this one. Let them speak in the media, debate with them, that's the best way to arrive at the truth IMO. Censoring increases suspicion. |